Valentino Rossi Wife

 

Valentino Rossi has reignited his rivalry with reigning MotoGP world champion Marc Marquez by claiming that the Honda rider has “destroyed” the sport, following their latest clash at the Argentine Grand Prix.

  1. Valentino Rossi Wife

VALENTINO Rossi has been spotted with a new girlfriend on his boat in Italy. Rossi was photographed with 23-year old Italian model Linda Morselli on his yacht Titilla II. Morselli was a finalist in the 2006 Miss Italy contest (at just 17) but more recently, she was a grid girl for the Ducati MotoGP team at San Marino in 2011. Valentino Rossi girlfriend gave him all her love and he started to try even harder in order to achieve his goals. She is the type of a person that all men would enjoy dating, because she is funny and manages to keep a smile on her boyfriend’s face.

Nine-time world champion Rossi was taken out of Sunday’s Grand Prix when a recovering Marquez rode into the side of his Yamaha and forced him onto the wet grass, leaving him little option than to fall off late in the race.

The move saw Marquez hit with a 30-second penalty that dropped him from fifth to 18th and out of the points, having already served a ride-through penalty for riding the wrong way around the track after stalling his bike on the grid. The Spaniard was penalised for “irresponsible riding”, having already been told to give Aleix Espargaro back a place for squeezing the KTM rider off the track, but Rossi refused to let Marquez off the hook lightly and issued a strong response to his on-track antics after the race.

We’ll tell you what’s true. You can form your own view.

From 15p€0.18$0.18USD 0.27 a day, more exclusives, analysis and extras.

'This is a very bad situation, because he destroyed our sport, because he [doesn't] have any respect for his rivals, never,' Rossi said.

'When you go 300kmh on the track, you have to have a respect for your rival, you have to be strong, you have to make the maximum, but [doing it] like this is over.

'If you take what's happened this weekend - one by one, can happen to everybody. You can make a mistake in braking, you can touch the other guy - [this] happens - this is racing.

'But from Friday morning, he [did] this with [Maverick] Vinales, [Andrea] Dovizioso. He [did] this with me on Saturday morning - and today in the race he [went] straight to four riders, because he [does this] purposely.

'It is not a mistake, because he points the leg - between the leg and the bike - because he knows he [doesn't] crash but you crash - he hopes that you crash. So if you start to play like this, you raise the level to a very dangerous point, because if all the riders race like this, without any respect for rivals, this is a very dangerous sport and [it will] finish in a bad way.'

Rossi, a veteran of 17 full seasons in the premier class and currently riding his 22nd season of Grand Prix racing, went one step further by admitting that the prospect of racing directly against Marquez is one that makes him fear for his safety.

'I'm scared - I'm scared on the track when I am with Marquez,” he added. “I'm scared today when I see his name on the board, because I know that he comes to me [and] I know already. You have to think, to hope that you don't crash.'

Marquez attempted to enter Rossi’s garage after the race to apologise for causing the accident at Turn 13, only for Yamaha team members to deny him entry, and he defended his action by insisting he “didn’t make anything crazy” and that any contact during the race was not deliberate.

'Today what happened to Valentino was a mistake, [a] consequence of the track conditions because I locked the front,' Marquez said, with the Grand Prix taking place in changeable conditions on a drying Autodromo Termas de Rio Hondo track.

'You needed to understand how the track condition was - of course in that line [it] was dry but I [took the] wet patch, locked the front, released the brakes.

'Okay, I had the contact - I tried to turn and then when I see that he crashed I just try to say sorry.

'If you check - [Johann] Zarco with Dani [Pedrosa], [Danilo] Petrucci with Aleix [Espargaro]. Today was quite difficult but it doesn't matter - I did my 100 per cent and of course [it was a] tricky Sunday.'

The dispute between the pair is the complete opposite of their clash at the end of the 2015 MotoGP season when Rossi was adjudged to have deliberately forced Marquez wide during the penultimate race in Malaysia, resulting in his rival crashing out and landing himself with a grid penalty for the final Grand Prix that sent him to the back of the grid after qualifying, allowing then-teammate Jorge Lorenzo to claim the title.

Sete Gibernau Bultó
NationalitySpanish
BornManuel Gibernau Bultó
15 December 1972 (age 46)
Barcelona, Spain
Current teamPons Racing
Bike number15
Motorcycle racing career statistics
MotoGP World Championship
Active years2002–2006, 2009
ManufacturersSuzuki, Honda, Ducati
Championships0
2009 championship position19th (12 pts)
StartsWinsPodiumsPolesF. lapsPoints
84824125842
500cc World Championship
Active years1997–2001
ManufacturersYamaha, Honda, Suzuki
Championships0
2001 championship position9th (119 pts)
StartsWinsPodiumsPolesF. lapsPoints
761613484
250cc World Championship
Active years1992–1996
ManufacturersYamaha, Honda
Championships0
1996 championship position22nd (20 pts)
StartsWinsPodiumsPolesF. lapsPoints
19000020

Manuel 'Sete' Gibernau Bultó (born 15 December 1972) is a Spanish former professional Grand Prix motorcycle road racer.[1] His racing career spanned two different eras of motorcycle racing, beginning with the two-stroke-dominated period prior to the 2002 season, and the four-strokeMotoGP era. Gibernau was one of the top riders in Grand Prix racing at the beginning of the MotoGP era.[2]

Gibernau intends to make a 2019 comeback in a new, five-race series for electric motorcycles, called MotoE World Cup. His last comeback was in 2009 with the Onde 2000 Grand Prix team. He participated in six races before the team failed.[3]

  • 1Biography
  • 3Career statistics

Biography[edit]

Gibernau is the grandson of Francisco Xavier 'Paco' Bultó, the founder of the Spanish Bultaco motorcycle company.[4] He began his competitive careers in observed trials competitions.[4] After trying many different bike categories, in particular those built by his uncle, Gibernau finally turned to road racing in 1990. In 1992, he competed in the Spanish 125cc Gilera Cup championship and entered into his first Grand Prix race at the 1992 250cc Spanish Grand Prix.[4]

250 cc career[edit]

Gibernau moved up to the 250cc Spanish national championship in 1993, finishing the season in fifth place.[4] He also competed in the 250cc FIM Grand Prix held at Jarama, this time riding for the Kenny RobertsYamaha team.[1] He remained in the 250cc Spanish national championship, finishing in fourth place in 1994 and, once again rode one Grand Prix race for the Roberts team at the 1994 250cc European Grand Prix at the Circuit de Catalunya.[1][4] In 1995 he finished in third place in the 250cc Spanish national championship and once again competed in the 1995 250cc European Grand Prix, this time riding for the Pons Racing team run by Spanish former world champion Sito Pons.[1][4]

Gibernau started his full-time Grand Prix career in 1996 riding a Honda NSR250 for the Axo Honda team.[4] He scored his first world championship points with an 11th-place finish at the Spanish Grand Prix.[1] With three races left in the season, he was hired by former world champion Wayne Rainey's Yamaha team.[4]

500 cc career[edit]

Gibernau remained with the Rainey team in 1997, moving up to the premier 500 cc class and finishing the season in a respectable thirteenth place.[1] In 1998, Gibernau replaced an injured Takuma Aoki on the Honda NSR500Vv-twin motorcycle.[4] Despite his bike lacking the power of the four cylinder bikes used by the Hondafactory team, he still managed to score his first podium result with a third place at the Madrid Grand Prix.[1] He went on to score two fourth-place finishes and ended the season in eleventh place.[1] Gibernau also teamed up with fellow Honda rider Alex Barros to finish second in the prestigious Suzuka 8 Hoursendurance race held in Japan.[5]

Gibernau would begin the 1999 season on the Honda NSR500V but, once again he was called upon to replace an injured rider when, reigning 500 cc world champion Mick Doohan was injured during practice for the third round of the year at the Jerez Circuit.[4][6] Now competing with the top-tier Honda NSR500 four cylinder race bike, he took full advantage, scoring four podium results, including a second-place finish at the South African Grand Prix and, finished the year in fifth place in the 500 cc championship.[1] After the successes of the 1999 season, the 2000 season was a disappointment as, Gibernau dropped to fifteenth place in the 500 cc world championship.[1]

Gibernau joined the Suzuki team for 2001 season. The highpoint of his season came at the rain-interrupted Valencia Grand Prix[7] when, on the right tires in drying conditions, he won his first-ever Grand Prix victory.[4] On the whole, the Suzuki RGV500 wasn't as competitive as the Honda and Yamaha machines and Gibernau would finish the season in ninth place.[1]

MotoGP career[edit]

The 2002 season would mark the beginning of the MotoGP era as, rule changes instituted by the F.I.M. saw the introduction of four-stroke machines of up to 990 cubic centimeters in engine capacity. Suzuki's new GSV-R would lag behind those of its competitors with only Akira Ryo taking a podium at the season opening race in Suzuka. Gibernau would suffer seven retirements in sixteen races and finished the season in 16th place.[1] One bright spot was the rain-soaked Portuguese Grand Prix when, Gibernau took the lead from a third row start and built a comfortable gap over second place Valentino Rossi, before crashing out of the race three laps from the finish.[8]

Valentino Rossi Wife

For 2003, Gibernau moved to the Gresini Honda team riding RC211V five cylinder motorcycles.[4] Tragically, his Japanese teammate Daijiro Kato died in a racing accident in the season-opening Japanese Grand Prix.[9] The tragedy seemed to inspire the notoriously temperamental and spiritual Gibernau. With Kato's #74 on the bike alongside his traditional #15, Gibernau managed not only to win the next round in South Africa[10] but also challenge Valentino Rossi for the championship throughout the year.[1] 2003 was Gibernau's most consistent season, winning four races along with five second-place finishes, earning a total of 277 points . Rossi has described 2003 in his career as 'the year of Gibernau, it was hard until the end.'[2]

There was much anticipation surrounding the 2004 championship as Valentino Rossi had made surprising move to the Yamaha team and, Gibernau's preseason and early season speed would indicate he was in a good position to win the title. Gibernau finished on the podium in the first three races, winning two of them and, had gained the promising start to the season with Rossi at times struggling to come to terms with his new bike.[1] However, a run of victories went Rossi's way after the French[11] round and didn't abate until the Brazilian Grand Prix where, one of the two most surprising incidents of Gibernau and Rossi's rivalries occurred.

Gibernau and Rossi were level on points, and Gibernau had the edge on Rossi for most of the weekend. Despite Kenny Roberts, Jr. taking the pole position, Gibernau was showing formidable race speed. Despite a poor start, Gibernau was in the leading group of riders and had just passed Rossi when, his Honda's front end slid out from underneath him.[12] Rossi, seeking to capitalise, pushed harder but he too then crashed out at the very same corner as Gibernau only a few laps later.[12] Gibernau again crashed out in Germany, this time Rossi stayed aboard but, could only manage 4th, moving 13 points ahead of Gibernau in the championship.[13] Rossi then put in a consistent run of podium finishes to take out the championship, despite Gibernau winning at Brno[14] and Losail.[1]

At the 2004 Qatar race, their previously good-natured rivalry spilled over, as Rossi accused Gibernau of pressuring officials to disqualify his qualifying result for allegedly later tampering with the track patch from which he started, to get better grip off an unusually dusty surface.[15] However, it was Gibernau's team, not Gibernau himself, who had noticed the track alteration and asked race organisers to investigate. The security camera tapes showed Rossi's team tampering with the track, doing extended burnouts on his starting zone which embedded rubber across it and provided better grip. Race organisers moved Rossi to the back of the grid.[16][17] The media reported that Rossi put a curse on his rival that weekend; Gibernau never won another Grand Prix race. The championship was decided two rounds later in the penultimate race at Phillip Island where Rossi won after exchanging the lead with Gibernau several times on the final lap. While Rossi celebrated, Gibernau was visibly disgruntled in Parc Fermé.[18]

Sete Gibernau riding one of Fausto Gresini's Hondas in 2005.

Tensions between Gibernau and Rossi came to a head at the first race of 2005 at the Spanish Grand Prix.[19] Gibernau led most of the race with Rossi a close second. On the penultimate lap, Rossi attacked and passed Gibernau to take the lead and then opened a gap on Gibernau. However, Rossi made a mistake and was re-passed by Gibernau with one lap remaining. On the final corner, Rossi made an aggressive pass on Gibernau which broke Gibernau's front fender to take the lead and win the race.[20] During the pass, Gibernau and Rossi came into contact and Gibernau was unable to complete the turn and ran wide into the gravel; he did not fall and was able to continue on and finish second. The pass was controversial amongst observers; some considered it overly aggressive or even dirty racing while others felt it was a brilliant racing move. The Spanish crowd booed and whistled at Rossi after the race. Gibernau was unimpressed with Rossi's move but neither he nor his Gresini team lodged a formal protest. Subsequently, Gibernau did not have a strong season, finishing the championship in 7th overall, while his Gresini teammate, Marco Melandri, finished second in the world championship behind Rossi.[1]

Valentino Rossi Wife

In 2006, Gibernau replaced Carlos Checa on the Ducati factory racing team, showing impressive speed with the Ducati Desmosedici race bike in preseason testing. Gibernau retired from the opening race at Jerez after qualifying in second place, due to electronics issues on his Ducati.[21] He took some time to come to terms with his unfamiliar Italian motorcycle. He did have a run of point scoring finishes in the early races of the season, at times proved to be faster than his experienced teammate Loris Capirossi. He managed to silence his doubters by taking pole position at the Italian Grand Prix, ahead of home-town favourites, Capirossi and Rossi. He finished fifth in the race, despite completing the race with a bleeding left foot, after his left boot protector fell off during the race.[22]

The remains of Gibernau's motorcycle after his crash at Barcelona in 2006.

The seventh round at the Catalan Grand Prix in Barcelona shaped the rest of Gibernau's season and the rest of his career, in an extraordinary crash described later by race commentators as 'Terrifying' and 'I have never been so scared in my life, commentating a race'.[23] In the crowded first corner, a fast right-hander, Gibernau's teammate Capirossi moved left around traffic across Gibernau's faster line (over 124 mph (198 km/h) at the point of the accident, according to the datalogger) and collected his front brake lever, locking Gibernau's front wheel and flipping his bike end over end. It only narrowly missed landing on the unconscious Gibernau. In the resulting group crash, six riders went into the gravel, five motorcycles were wrecked, three riders were taken to hospital, and race organisers stopped the race. Gibernau's ambulance itself then had an accident on the way to hospital, hitting a bus just 50 metres from the hospital entrance, although he did not suffer any further injury.[24] It was later confirmed that he had concussion and had broken a bone in his hand and re-broken the collar bone broken at Assen, necessitating the removal and replacement of the metal plate.[25] The injuries came at a bad time - Catalunya was the first of five races in six weeks. Gibernau missed the following two races at Assen and Donington Park. Despite feeling weak, he raced in the German and United States rounds and, was never far behind his fitter teammate on identical machinery: on the Sachsenring he finished only three places behind Capirossi, and at Laguna Seca he finished only two places behind.[26][27] But within three days of returning to Barcelona, he was back in hospital: the titanium plate in his collar bone had weakened, causing complications. He missed the round at Brno in the Czech Republic.

His fitness improved and he managed a commendable 5th place at the Malaysian Grand Prix on Sunday 10 September, and had a podium snatched from him in a 'last-gasp effort' by Rossi at the Australian Grand Prix.[28] After another fourth place at the Japanese Grand Prix, Gibernau was fastest in the first ever 800 cc test at Motegi. In the second-last round of the season in Portugal, he was riding in fifth place when Casey Stoner crashed in front of him too close to avoid and brought Gibernau down with him.[29] Gibernau suffered a broken fifth metacarpal in his hand and had apparently re-bent one of the titanium plates in his collar bone.

The Ducati Marlboro team replaced Gibernau with Casey Stoner for 2007. He turned down offers from Kawasaki, Sito Pons and the Ilmor team and decided to retire from motorcycle racing, saying at a press conference on 8 November 2006,'If I had accepted the offers to continue just for the sake of carrying on then it wouldn't have made me happy, especially if it was just for money.'[30]

Comeback[edit]

Gibernau returned to action on 17 June 2008, testing the Desmosedici GP9 at the Mugello Circuit, in a three-day test session alongside official test rider Vittoriano Guareschi. There was speculation that he could replace the uncompetitive Marco Melandri aboard the second Factory Ducati for the later races in the 2008 season. Despite positive results, Ducati MotoGP Project Director Livio Suppo was unwilling to confirm any definite future for Gibernau with the team. Sete again tested the Desmosedici GP8 and GP9 on a three-day test beginning on 1 July 2008 at the Mugello circuit. He recorded a best time of 1´50.5 on board the GP8 on race tyres, just a few tenths off this year's race record at Mugello set by Casey Stoner.[31] He clocked a 1´48.9 on 30 July at Mugello on qualifying tyres which would have placed him 7th on the starting grid for the 2008 Italian Grand Prix.[32]

After a few months of speculation, on 23 October at Valencia, it was officially confirmed that he would return to race in 2009 on Onde 2000 Ducati, a Ducati satellite team run by Angel Nieto. The squad is backed by Onde 2000, a Spanish building concern. With number 15 taken by Alex de Angelis, a new figure has been used for Gibernau's comeback campaign. Gibernau chose 59, in reference to the year in which his grandfather's Bultaco company produced their first bike.

He began testing for the new team at Valencia. Gibernau's quickest lap was a 1´34.451 riding the Onde 2000 Ducati GP9, that placed him a modest 14th on the 18-rider timesheets, almost 2sec from fastest man Casey Stoner (using the GP9 Ducati).[33][34] At Jerez, in his first official test since return to MotoGP, he ranked 9th among 14 riders, notably faster than Niccolo Canepa on Alice Ducati and Vittoriano Guareschi on the factory Ducati.[35] Gibernau admitted that, at 35, among the current crop of young MotoGP stars - 'I´m going to have to work very hard and I´m ready for that.'[36] He admitted he was not back in MotoGP to win races, but rather to enjoy himself on the bike. Gibernau acknowledged the bikes had changed a lot in the two years he had been absent from the sport. He noted that the Ducati was now very competitive with lot of potential. 'Cornering speed is extremely quick and compared to 2006 there's a lot more electronics. You must trust it almost with your eyes closed, and I still can't do it. I think the rider should do certain things, while instead you must let the bike do it.'

Valentino Rossi said he is looking forward to renewing his rivalry with the former foe... “I am sorry I didn't see Sete on the track when we tested in Valencia because I think it's quite a big emotion for us to be together on the track again after all our great battles. I am happy to see him back. We spoke a little bit in the summer when he was thinking about coming back and I’m looking forward to racing him again.”[37]

He missed the race at Mugello after breaking his collar bone in the practice session at Le Mans. On 4 June he confirmed that he will be fit to race at his home track Circuit de Catalunya. On 12 July 2009 the Grupo Francisco Hernando team announced that they would be withdrawing from the MotoGP championship due to financial constraints, leaving Gibernau without a ride for the remainder of the 2009 season.[38]

Valentino Rossi has mentioned Casey Stoner, followed by Gibernau as his hardest rivals ever.[2] Gibernau was known for his wet-weather abilities and was occasionally referred to as rainmaster. However, despite his flair, he was all too often let down by an apparently temperamental nature. In-race setbacks could disproportionately affect his competitiveness, both negatively and positively. His career started slowly until he found his motivation and his intermittent flair became consistent. Then he was the principal challenger for Rossi's crown until 2005. The 2006 brought a series of emotional, technical, and injury setbacks, apparently sapping his motivation. It culminated in a major mid-season no-fault racing incident which effectively eliminated him from the championship.

Personal life[edit]

Presently residing in Switzerland, Gibernau is well educated, he speaks fluent Spanish, Catalan, Italian and English; plus some French and German. His hobbies include cycling and water skiing.

Gibernau's ex-wife is the Spanish supermodel Esther Cañadas. She was always supportive of Gibernau and could often be seen in the pit garage during races, cheering him on. He formerly rode with a number 15 good luck charm, but rode with a charm given to him by Cañadas when they became a couple. However, after one year as a married couple they announced their separation in mid 2008.

Like most riders, he has his superstitions - such as always putting his right boot on first.

Career statistics[edit]

1990 - 2000[edit]

  • 1990 - Debut in the 'Gilera Cup' Championship.
  • 1991 - Junior Champion in the Spanish and Catalan Regional Championship.
  • 1992 - European Championship, 250cc class. Took part in the Spanish GP race as a wild card in the 250cc class.
  • 1993 - Third classified in the Spanish Championship, 250cc class, Yamaha;
  • 1994 - Fifth classified in the Spanish Championship, 250cc class.
  • 1995 - Third classified in the Spanish Championship, 250cc class.
  • 1996 - Twenty-first classified in the World Championship, 250cc class, Team Yamaha Rainey.
  • 1997 - Thirteenth classified in the World Championship, 500cc class, Team Yamaha Rainey.
  • 1998 - Eleventh classified in the World Championship, 500cc class, Honda Factory Team.
  • 1999 - Fifth classified in the World Championship, 500cc class, Honda HRC Team.
  • 2000 - Fifteenth classified in the World Championship, 500cc class, Honda Repsol Team.

Races by year[1][edit]

Valentino

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position, races in italics indicate fastest lap)

YearClassTeamMachine1234567891011121314151617PtsPosWins
1992250ccYamahaYZR250JPNAUSMALSPA
27
ITAEURGERNEDHUNFRAGBRBRARSA0NC0
1993250ccMarlboro Roberts-YamahaYZR250AUSMALJPNSPAAUTGERNEDEURRSMGBRCZEITAUSAFIM
Ret
0NC0
1994250ccMarlboro Roberts-YamahaYZR250AUSMALJPNSPAAUTGERNEDITAFRAGBRCZEUSAARGEUR
21
0NC0
1995250ccFortuna Honda-PonsNSR250AUSMALJPNSPAGERITANEDFRAGBRCZEBRAARGEUR
Ret
0NC0
1996250ccAxo-HondaNSR250MAL
Ret
INA
17
JPN
20
SPA
11
ITA
24
FRA
Ret
NED
Ret
GER
19
GBR
11
AUT
18
CZE
14
IMO
18
2022nd0
Rainey-YamahaYZR250CAT
Ret
BRA
8
AUS
Ret
1997500ccRainey-YamahaYZR500MAL
9
JPN
Ret
SPA
9
ITA
9
AUT
Ret
FRA
13
NED
19
IMO
11
GER
7
BRA
Ret
GBR
Ret
CZE
Ret
CAT
Ret
INA
8
AUS
6
5613th0
1998500ccRepsol HondaNSR500VJPN
10
MAL
Ret
SPA
12
ITA
14
FRA
10
MAD
3
NED
Ret
GBR
Ret
GER
6
CZE
8
IMO
4
CAT
4
AUS
Ret
ARG
9
7211th0
1999500ccRepsol HondaNSR500VMAL
10
JPN
5
SPA
3
FRA
4
1655th0
NSR500ITA
6
CAT
3
NED
3
GBR
Inj
GER
9
CZE
10
IMO
10
VAL
9
AUS
6
RSA
2
BRA
5
ARG
6
2000500ccRepsol HondaNSR500RSA
Ret
MAL
7
JPN
Ret
SPA
Ret
FRA
15
ITA
10
CAT
Ret
NED
7
GBR
11
GER
10
CZE
8
POR
Ret
VAL
8
BRA
7
PAC
12
AUS
Ret
7215th0
2001500ccTelefónica MoviStar-SuzukiRGV500JPN
Ret
RSA
10
SPA
10
FRA
6
ITA
5
CAT
5
NED
7
GBR
11
GER
10
CZE
8
POR
Ret
VAL
1
PAC
9
AUS
9
MAL
8
BRA
12
1199th1
2002MotoGPTelefónica MoviStar-SuzukiGSV-RJPN
Ret
RSA
16
SPA
9
FRA
12
ITA
Ret
CAT
Ret
NED
Ret
GBR
6
GER
Ret
CZE
4
POR
Ret
BRA
8
PAC
Ret
MAL
14
AUS
12
VAL
13
5116th0
2003MotoGPTelefónica MoviStar-HondaRC211VJPN
4
RSA
1
SPA
Ret
FRA
1
ITA
7
CAT
3
NED
1
GBR
2
GER
1
CZE
2
POR
4
BRA
2
PAC
4
MAL
2
AUS
4
VAL
2
2772nd4
2004MotoGPTelefónica MoviStar-HondaRC211VRSA
3
SPA
1
FRA
1
ITA
2
CAT
2
NED
2
BRA
Ret
GER
Ret
GBR
3
CZE
1
POR
4
JPN
6
QAT
1
MAL
7
AUS
2
VAL
4
2572nd4
2005MotoGPMovistar Honda-MotoGPRC211VSPA
2
POR
Ret
CHN
4
FRA
2
ITA
Ret
CAT
2
NED
5
USA
5
GBR
Ret
GER
2
CZE
Ret
JPN
Ret
MAL
Ret
QAT
5
AUS
5
TUR
4
VAL
Ret
1507th0
2006MotoGPDucati MarlboroGP6SPA
Ret
QAT
4
TUR
11
CHN
9
FRA
8
ITA
5
CAT
Ret
NED
Inj
GBR
Inj
GER
8
USA
10
CZE
Inj
MAL
5
AUS
4
JPN
4
POR
Ret
VAL
Inj
9513th0
2009MotoGPOnde 2000-DucatiGP9QAT
13
JPN
Ret
SPA
11
FRA
Inj
ITA
Inj
CAT
15
NED
13
USA
Ret
GERGBRCZEINDSMRPORAUSMALVAL1219th0

References[edit]

  1. ^ abcdefghijklmnopq'Sete Gibernau at MotoGP.com'. motogp.com. Retrieved 13 December 2010.
  2. ^ abc'Rossi reviews best form of MotoGP career'. MotoGP.com. 2008-09-29. Retrieved 2008-10-23.
  3. ^Former MotoGP frontrunner Sete Gibernau to make comeback in MotoEAutosport, 12 November 2018. Retrieved 16 December 2018
  4. ^ abcdefghijkl'Sete Gibernau Profile'. f1network.net. Retrieved 13 December 2010.
  5. ^'Suzuka 8 Hours'. motoracing-japan.com. Retrieved 13 December 2010.
  6. ^'Mick's bike bequeathed to Gibernau'. news.drive.com.au. Archived from the original on 22 July 2011. Retrieved 14 December 2010.
  7. ^'Sete wins first 500 GP!'. Crash.net. Crash Media Group. 23 September 2001. Retrieved 21 July 2015.
  8. ^'Sete Gibernau is rainmaster, but Rossi wins'. f1network.net. Retrieved 14 December 2010.
  9. ^'Kato dies from crash injuries'. news.bbc.co.uk. 19 April 2003. Retrieved 13 December 2010.
  10. ^'Gibernau takes dream win!'. Crash.net. Crash Media Group. 21 April 2003. Retrieved 21 July 2015.
  11. ^'Sete back-to-back as Spain rules Le Mans'. Crash.net. Crash Media Group. 16 May 2004. Retrieved 21 July 2015.
  12. ^ ab'Tamada wins as points leaders fall in the Río GP'. f1network.net. Retrieved 14 December 2010.
  13. ^'Max Biaggi wins in Germany; Honda finish 1-2-3'. f1network.net. Retrieved 14 December 2010.
  14. ^'Gibernau Czechs rivals with Brno victory'. Crash.net. Crash Media Group. 22 August 2004. Retrieved 21 July 2015.
  15. ^'Sete Gibernau wins as Valentino Rossi crashes'. f1network.net. Retrieved 14 December 2010.
  16. ^'MotoGP set-up report – Qatar'. rossifiles.com. Retrieved 14 December 2010.
  17. ^'Gibernau takes win as Rossi crashes in Qatar'. motogp.com. Retrieved 14 December 2010.
  18. ^Broadbent, Rick (4 November 2005). 'Melandri happy to be fall guy no more'. London: timesonline.co.uk. Retrieved 14 December 2010.
  19. ^'Rossi wins after last turn Sete take-out!'. Crash.net. Crash Media Group. 10 April 2005. Retrieved 27 July 2015.
  20. ^'Dramatic last lap action in MotoGP '05 round one'. f1network.net. Retrieved 14 December 2010.
  21. ^'A winning start for Ducati and Loris Capirossi'. f1network.net. Retrieved 14 December 2010.
  22. ^'Valentino Rossi wins MotoGP thriller at Mugello'. f1network.net. Retrieved 14 December 2010.
  23. ^British Eurosport, 'MotoGP Series - Season Review', broadcast 2006-11-05; Toby Moody and Julian Ryder respectively
  24. ^'Sete Gibernau breaks collarbone and concussed after Catalunya Grand Prix crash'. girlstalksports.com. Retrieved 14 December 2010.
  25. ^'Injured Gibernau to miss Dutch GP'. news.bbc.co.uk. 20 June 2006. Retrieved 14 December 2010.
  26. ^'Rossi defeats Honda might in Germany'. f1network.net. Retrieved 14 December 2010.
  27. ^'Hayden wins it again at Laguna Seca'. f1network.net. Retrieved 14 December 2010.
  28. ^'Marco Melandri wins flag-to-flag MotoGP race'. f1network.net. Retrieved 14 December 2010.
  29. ^'Elías wins GP as Hayden gets taken out in Portugal'. f1network.net. Retrieved 14 December 2010.
  30. ^'Gibernau rejects Kawasaki to quit'. news.bbc.co.uk. 8 November 2006. Retrieved 14 December 2010.
  31. ^'Positive end to latest Ducati test with Gibernau at Mugello'. motogp.com. Retrieved 14 December 2010.
  32. ^'Gibernau brings Ducati test to early conclusion'. motogp.com. Retrieved 14 December 2010.
  33. ^'Gibernau gets resettled into MotoGP action in comeback test'. motogp.com. Retrieved 14 December 2010.
  34. ^'Gibernau makes Onde 2000 debut'. crash.net. Retrieved 14 December 2010.
  35. ^'MotoGP Official Test at Jerez, Spain 27/11/08'. motogp.com. Retrieved 14 December 2010.
  36. ^'Gibernau makes return official in Valencia presentation'. MotoGP.com. 2008-10-23. Retrieved 2008-10-23.
  37. ^'Valentino Rossi looking forward to new Sete Gibernau battle'. motorcyclenews.com. Retrieved 14 December 2010.
  38. ^'Gibernau woe as team quits MotoGP'. Insidebikes.com. 2009-07-13. Archived from the original on 2011-07-08. Retrieved 2009-07-01.

External links[edit]

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sete Gibernau.
  • Official website in Spanish and English versions.
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Sete_Gibernau&oldid=895116789'